November 21, 2018 Page 3 INSIDE The Week in Review This page Sponsored by: page 2 pages 8-11 Arts & ENTERTAINMENT Local students participate in the CommuniCare Leadership Retreat at the University of Portland. Community Service Challenge Over 300 students from 21 schools, including Portland, had the opportunity to learn and par- ticipate in community grantmak- ing during a leadership retreat last week at the University of Port- land. They decided what causes to fund, how to raise the money, who to interview and who should ulti- mately receive their grants. The event was sponsored by CommuniCare, a non-profit pro- M ETRO gram started in 1997 by Harold and Arlene Schnitzer. It was their dream to provide an environment where young adults learn about the needs of their communities through grantmaking and devel- op a long-term understanding of philanthropy and the ethic of vol- unteerism. Guest speakers included Harold Schnitzer and Kay Toran, a leader from Portland’s black community page 9 Police Again Confront Protests Dueling clashes not as severe, but arrest made O PINION C LASSIFIEDS who serves as chief executive offi- cer and president of Volunteers of America Oregon. By challenging students to en- gage in community service that is both rewarding and educational, CommuniCare hopes to encour- age them to become active adult citizens in their community. For more information on how this pro- gram works, visit communicareor. org. pages 12-13 pages 14-15 A series of protests Saturday resulted in a most- ly peaceful separation of right-wing and count- er-protesting left-wing demonstrators by Portland police, though the protests devolved into some skirmishes near the end of the planned events and six were arrested. The protests took place in a pair of parks near Portland’s City Hall, downtown. Left-wing protestors started moibilizing Satur- day morning in response a planned demonstration later in the day by an offshoot of the right-wing group Patriot Prayer which rallied in support of the so-called “Him Too Movement,” which claims that men are being oppressed and abused by unfair prosecutions of sexual assault, a response to the Me Too movement. By late afternoon, Portland police and other law enforcement officers successfully separated the two sides for more than three hours, shutting down a portion of Chapman Square and some sidewalks adjacent to Terry Schrunk Plaza. When the Patriot Prayer group appeared to disperse, but held an impromptu march down- town, some skirmishes broke out when they in- tentionally tried to clash with masked, black-clad antifascists. Police gave dispersal orders to the crowds, but it failed to de-escalate the situation. The assaul- tive behavior by some of the people attending the protests included the throwing of projectiles at demonstrators and officers, including sticks, glass bottles, lit road flares, bottles filled with what po- lice believed was urine, and gopher gas, authori- ties said. Police said they used a rubber ball dis- traction device for crowd control. Six were arrested, including five charged with c ontinueD on p Age 4